A point x of a subset A of a topological space X is called a
limit point of A (in X) if every neighbourhood of x also contains a point of A other than x itself, and an
isolated point of A otherwise. A subset without isolated points is said to be
dense-in-itself. A subset A of a topological space X is called
nowhere dense (in X) if there is no neighborhood in X on which A is dense. Equivalently, a subset of a topological space is nowhere dense
if and only if the interior of its closure is empty. The interior of the complement of a nowhere dense set is always dense. The complement of a closed nowhere dense set is a dense open set. Given a topological space X, a subset A of X that can be expressed as the union of countably many nowhere dense subsets of X is called
meagre. The rational numbers, while dense in the real numbers, are meagre as a subset of the reals. A topological space with a countable dense subset is called
separable. A topological space is a
Baire space if and only if the intersection of countably many dense open sets is always dense. A topological space is called
resolvable if it is the union of two disjoint dense subsets. More generally, a topological space is called κ-resolvable for a
cardinal κ if it contains κ pairwise disjoint dense sets. An
embedding of a topological space X as a dense subset of a
compact space is called a
compactification of X. A
linear operator between
topological vector spaces X and Y is said to be
densely defined if its
domain is a dense subset of X and if its
range is contained within Y. See also
Continuous linear extension. A topological space X is
hyperconnected if and only if every nonempty open set is dense in X. A topological space is
submaximal if and only if every dense subset is open. If \left(X, d_X\right) is a metric space, then a non-empty subset Y is said to be \varepsilon-dense if \forall x \in X, \; \exists y \in Y \text{ such that } d_X(x, y) \leq \varepsilon. One can then show that D is dense in \left(X, d_X\right) if and only if it is ε-dense for every \varepsilon > 0. ==See also==